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Latvian government grants EUR 700,000 for cleaning up illegal plastic waste dump in Jurmala after fire

BC, Riga, 27.06.2017.Print version
The Latvian government today agreed to grant up to EUR 700,000 to the State Environmental Service for cleaning up the illegal plastic waste dump in the Jurmala sea-side resort town after a vast fire at the site about a week ago, informed LETA.

The financing will be granted from the contingency funds in the national budget.


According to the State Environmental Service, there are about 14,000 tons of plastic waste that need to be removed as soon possible to prevent further contamination. Prima M, the company that owns the facility, has refused to clean up the territory, saying it had no money to pay for the clean-up. Also, the company still insists that the plastic materials stored in its territory were recyclable materials, not waste.


The State Environmental Service will hold an urgent tender to find a contractor for the clean-up operation. The preliminary cost estimate is up to EUR 50 (VAT included) per ton of plastic materials that have to be removed.


As reported, a highly dangerous fire started in the Sloka area in Jurmala on the afternoon of June 18 as plastic waste caught fire. Flames spread over the area of 1.2 hectares and consumed also a hangar, the State Fire and Rescue Service said. The fire that released dark clouds of potentially hazardous smoke was put out the following morning.


The State Environment Service had instructed the company to remove waste from the territory already before the fire but Prima M turned to the court, asking it to repeal the decision by the environmental authority.


After the fire Prima M said they suspected that the fire had been started by arsonists. The Latvian State Police confirmed they had opened a criminal proceeding over the fire in Jurmala to investigate a crime against property.






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